Bacteria Responsible
for Gum Disease Facilitates Rheumatoid Arthritis
Does gum disease
indicate future joint problems? Although researchers and clinicians have long
known about an association between two prevalent chronic inflammatory diseases
-- periodontal disease and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) -- the microbiological mechanisms
have remained unclear.
In an article
published in PLoS Pathogens, University of Louisville School of Dentistry Oral
Health and Systemic Diseases group researcher Jan Potempa, PhD, DSc, and an
international team of scientists from the European Union's Gums and Joints
project have uncovered how the bacterium responsible for periodontal disease,
Porphyromonas gingivalisworsens RA by leading to earlier onset, faster
progression and greater severity of the disease, including increased bone and
cartilage destruction.
The scientists found
that P. gingivalis produces a unique enzyme, peptidylarginine deiminanse (PAD)
which then enhances collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), a form of arthritis
similar to RA produced in the lab. PAD changes residues of certain proteins
into citrulline, and the body recognizes citullinated proteins as intruders,
leading to an immune attack. In RA patients, the subsequent result is chronic
inflammation responsible for bone and cartilage destruction within the joints.
Potempa and his team
studied another oral bacterium, Prevotella intermedia for the same affect, but
learned it did not produce PAD, and did not affect CIA.
“Taken together, our
results suggest that bacterial PAD may constitute the mechanistic link between
P. gingivalis periodontal infection and rheumatoid arthritis, but this
ground-breaking conclusion will need to be verified with further
research," he said. Potempa said he
is hopeful these findings will shed new light on the treatment and prevention
of RA.”
Studies indicate that
compared to the general population, people with periodontal disease have an
increased prevalence of RA and, periodontal disease is at least two times more
prevalent in RA patients. Other research has shown that a P. gingivalis
infection in the mouth will precede RA, and the bacterium is the likely culprit
for onset and continuation of the autoimmune inflammatory responses that occur
in the disease.
sciencedaily.com
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